VM provisioning and management tool
Project description
libvirt-instance
libvirt-instance
is a CLI tool for creating virtual machines. It uses the
Libvirt API, and is compatible with other Libvirt applications.
Think of it as a more opinionated alternative to virt-install
.
Project goals
- Make creating Libvirt virtual machines (VMs) via the command-line interface simpler for human operators, by providing a way to group some commonly-used configurations as presets.
- Provide a convenient way to deploy cloud instances on Libvirt without the need for a metadata service (the NoCloud data source is used to provide metadata to instances).
The tool does not support deleting Libvirt resources, and there are no plans to
implement that so far. Any delete operations can be performed using virsh
.
Installation
This package depends on libvirt-python
. Installing into a virtualenv might
require GCC, Python3 and Libvirt development OS packages to be installed.
Run dnf --enablerepo=devel install gcc python3-devel libvirt-devel
to install
those packages if you're using RockyLinux 9.
Otherwise (when not using virtualenv), having the python3-libvirt
OS package
installed should be sufficient.
libvirt-instance
can be installed by running pip3 install libvirt-instance
.
It requires Python 3.9+ to run.
Showcase
While both local and remote Libvirt daemons are supported, the following example is using a local Libvirt daemon for sake of simplicity. The commands should be executed by a user who has sufficient Libvirt access privileges.
URI=qemu:///system
# All operations on disks are done using the Libvirt pool APIs.
# Libvirt doesn't usually come with any storage pools defined, so let's define
# one named "images".
virsh -c "$URI" pool-define-as images dir --target /var/lib/libvirt/images
virsh -c "$URI" pool-autostart images
virsh -c "$URI" pool-start images
# Create a config file with a preset for disks from the above pool,
# and a preset for network interfaces in the default Libvirt NAT network (this
# network exists by default).
cat <<"EOF" >./libvirt-instance-config.yaml
preset:
disk:
local:
type: volume
pool: images
bus: virtio
cache: none
interface:
nat:
type: network
model-type: virtio
network: default
EOF
# Fetch a cloud image from the Internet and upload it to Libvirt as a volume,
# so we can use it as the base image for VM disks.
curl -LfsS \
https://download.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora/linux/releases/37/Cloud/x86_64/images/Fedora-Cloud-Base-37-1.7.x86_64.raw.xz \
| xzcat >./f37-cloud-amd64.raw
image_size=$(stat --printf="%s" ./f37-cloud-amd64.raw)
virsh -c "$URI" vol-create-as images f37-cloud-amd64.raw "${image_size}b" --format raw
virsh -c "$URI" vol-upload f37-cloud-amd64.raw ./f37-cloud-amd64.raw --pool images
# Generate a passphraseless SSH key for this demo.
ssh-keygen -f mykey -N ''
# Create user-data.
cat <<EOF >./user-data
#cloud-config
ssh_authorized_keys:
- $(cat ./mykey.pub)
packages:
- nginx
runcmd:
- systemctl start nginx
EOF
# Create network-config.
cat <<"EOF" >./network-config
version: 2
ethernets:
eth0:
dhcp4: false
dhcp6: false
addresses:
- 192.168.122.10/24
gateway4: 192.168.122.1
nameservers:
addresses:
- 1.1.1.1
- 8.8.8.8
EOF
# Create the VM.
# headless-server-x86_64 is a built-in domain preset.
instance_id=$(
libvirt-instance -c "$URI" --config-file ./libvirt-instance-config.yaml create \
--domain-preset headless-server-x86_64 \
--memory 2GiB \
--vcpu 2 \
--disk local,5GiB,source=f37-cloud-amd64.raw \
--nic nat \
--cloud-seed-disk=local \
--cloud-user-data-file ./user-data \
--cloud-network-config-file ./network-config \
myvm \
| jq -er '."instance-id"')
# Start the VM.
virsh -c "$URI" start "$instance_id"
# Wait until cloud-init has finished executing.
until
ssh -i mykey \
-o IdentitiesOnly=true \
-o StrictHostKeyChecking=no \
-o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null \
fedora@192.168.122.10 \
cloud-init status --wait
do
sleep 1
done
# Get a page from Nginx on the VM.
curl http://192.168.122.10/
# Cleanup.
virsh -c "$URI" destroy "$instance_id"
virsh -c "$URI" undefine "$instance_id" --nvram --remove-all-storage
More examples
Creating non-image-based VMs is also an option.
VM with two disks and the PXE boot as the first option
libvirt-instance -c "$URI" --config-file ./libvirt-instance-config.yaml create \
--domain-preset headless-server-x86_64 \
--memory 2GiB \
--vcpu 2 \
--disk local,5GiB,boot-order=2 \
--disk local,10GiB \
--nic nat,boot-order=1 \
myvm
Alternative/non-native architectures are also supported. libvirt-instance
comes
with two built-in domain presets - headless-server-x86_64
and
headless-server-aarch64
. More presets can be defined in a config file.
Run libvirt-instance get-config
to see the currently-defined presets.
VM with encrypted disks
cat <<EOF >./secret.xml
<secret ephemeral='no' private='yes'>
<uuid>8eb167eb-b3bb-4047-91f4-a3ca1eb643ab</uuid>
</secret>
EOF
virsh -c "$URI" secret-define ./secret.xml
virsh -c "$URI" secret-set-value 8eb167eb-b3bb-4047-91f4-a3ca1eb643ab --interactive
# Enter new value for secret:
# encryption-secret could also be specified in a preset in libvirt-instance-config.yaml.
libvirt-instance -c "$URI" --config-file ./libvirt-instance-config.yaml create \
--domain-preset headless-server-x86_64 \
--memory 2GiB \
--vcpu 2 \
--disk local,5GiB,encryption-secret=8eb167eb-b3bb-4047-91f4-a3ca1eb643ab \
--disk local,10GiB,encryption-secret=8eb167eb-b3bb-4047-91f4-a3ca1eb643ab \
--nic nat \
myvm
ARM cloud image-based Fedora VM on a non-ARM KVM host
curl -LfsS \
https://download.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora/linux/releases/37/Cloud/aarch64/images/Fedora-Cloud-Base-37-1.7.aarch64.raw.xz \
| xzcat >./f37-cloud-arm64.raw
image_size=$(stat --printf="%s" ./f37-cloud-arm64.raw)
virsh -c "$URI" vol-create-as images f37-cloud-arm64.raw "${image_size}b" --format raw
virsh -c "$URI" vol-upload f37-cloud-arm64.raw ./f37-cloud-arm64.raw --pool images
libvirt-instance -c "$URI" --config-file ./libvirt-instance-config.yaml create \
--domain-preset headless-server-aarch64 \
--cpu-model cortex-a57 \
--domain-type qemu \
--memory 2GiB \
--vcpu 2 \
--disk local,5GiB,source=f37-cloud-arm64.raw \
--nic nat \
--cloud-seed-disk=local \
--cloud-user-data-file ./user-data \
--cloud-network-config-file ./network-config \
myvm
Configuration file
Some defaults and presets are already built in. Configuration file is a way to add more presets, or override existing presets and settings.
Three types of presets are currently supported: domain
, disk
, and interface
.
The default location of the config file is /etc/libvirt-instance-config.yaml
.
The --config-file
CLI argument provides a way to override that.
Run libvirt-instance get-config
to see the current config.
Domain presets
Example config snippet:
preset:
domain:
windows-server:
arch-name: x86_64
machine-type: pc
xml-file: /path/to/windows-server-base.xml
The above preset can be selected on the CLI using --domain-preset windows-server
when creating a new VM.
arch-name
can be any arhitecture (e.g. x86_64
, aarch64
) supported by the
target host.
machine-type
can be any machine type (e.g. pc
, q35
, virt
) supported by
the chosen architecture.
xml-file
specifies a file containing some
domain XML used as the foundation for
the VM being created. The tool will fill in the architecture, domain and
machine type, CPU (count and model), memory size, network interface,
disk (including any necessary SCSI controllers) entries into the base XML
automatically using the information from presets and CLI arguments.
Domain XML may alternatively be provided inline via the xml
key.
Disk presets
All operations on disks are done using Libvirt pool APIs, so disk presets may only reference Libvirt pools.
Currently dir
, logical
, and rbd
pools are supported.
Example config snippet:
preset:
disk:
ceph-ssd:
type: volume
pool: ceph-rbd-ssd
bus: scsi
cache: writeback
ceph-hdd:
type: volume
pool: ceph-rbd
bus: virtio
cache: writeback
local-secure:
type: volume
pool: images
bus: virtio
cache: none
encryption-format: luks
encryption-secret: 8eb167eb-b3bb-4047-91f4-a3ca1eb643ab
encryption-cipher: aes-256-cbc-sha256
encryption-ivgen: essiv-sha256
x86worker:
type: volume
pool: images
bus: virtio
cache: none
source: fedora37-cloud-amd64.raw
source-pool: ceph-rbd
CLI examples for the above: --disk ceph-ssd,16GiB --disk ceph-hdd,1TiB
,
--disk x86worker,32GiB
.
The only supported value for type
is volume
at the moment.
pool
specifies a target Libvirt pool for the volumes. This pool will also be
used to pull any information about volumes when adding disk devices to the
domain XML.
bus
(optional) is either virtio
for virtio-blk disks, or scsi
for
virtio-scsi disks. Defaults to virtio
.
cache
(optional) specifies any disk cache mode supported by Libvirt.
defaults to none
.
source
(optional) specifies a Libvirt volume containing the base image for
disks.
source-pool
(optional) specifies the Libvirt pool for the source
image.
Defaults to the same value as pool
when not specified.
boot-order
(optional) sets the device position in the boot order.
encryption-secret
(optional) specified a Libvirt secret UUID, and enables
disk encryption when set.
encryption-format
(optional) sets encryption format (default is luks
).
encryption-cipher
(optional) specifies encryption cipher details. Format
is name-size-mode-hash
, for example aes-128-cbc-sha256
.
encryption-ivgen
(optional) specifies the initialization vector generation
algorithm. Format is name-hash
, for example essiv-sha256
.
See Libvirt Storage volume encryption XML format documentation for more details about encryption parameters.
In most cases, the resulting disk device description in the domain XML will be a
volume reference (<disk type="volume">
). Some pool types (rbd
for instance)
do not support backing volume disks yet
(see domain_conf.c#L29929-L29939.
When adding disks from such pools, libvirt-instance
will transparently inline
the disk definition into the domain XML using the information (MONs, auth)
from the pool.
Interface presets
Currently bridge
and network
type interfaces are supported.
Example config snippet:
preset:
interface:
nat:
type: network
model-type: virtio
network: default
dmz:
type: bridge
model-type: virtio
bridge: br0
storage:
type: bridge
model-type: virtio
bridge: br1
mtu: 9000
CLI examples for the above: --nic nat
, --nic dmz --nic storage
.
model-type
(optional) specifies any model type supported by Libvirt
(e.g. virtio
, e1000
, rtl8139
, etc). Defaults to virtio
.
network
specifies the Libvirt network name for type: network
interfaces.
bridge
specifies the name of an existing network bridge for type: bridge
interfaces.
mtu
(optional) sets the MTU on the host-side TAP interface.
Note, the MTU also needs to be configured inside the guest.
boot-order
(optional) sets the device position in the boot order.
Technically, mac-address
(optional) can also be specified in an interface
preset, but it makes more sense to specify any MAC addresses on the command line
(e.g. --nic nat,mac-address=00:11:22:33:44:55:66
).
CLI options
See libvirt-instance --help
and libvirt-instance create --help
for the full
list of CLI options.
There are also some examples in the "Showcase" and "More examples" sections
illustrating how different options work together.
--disk <SPEC>
may be specified more than once to attach multiple disks to a
VM. Disks are created using the <VM-NAME>-disk<N>
naming scheme. If a volume
with the same name already exists in the target pool - libvirt-instance
will
exit with an error.
Disks are attached to the instance in the same order as specified on the command
line.
The pool
, bus
, cache
, source
, source-pool
, and boot-order
options
may be included in the disk spec, taking precedence over any corresponding
options from the chosen preset.
For example:
--disk local,10GiB,bus=scsi,cache=writeback,source=jammy-server-cloudimg-amd64.img
.
--nic <SPEC>
may also be specified more than once. The mac-address
,
model-type
, network
, bridge
, mtu
, and boot-order
options are supported
by --nic
, similar to --disk
options.
--cloud-seed-disk
enables the cloud-init support and is required when
either --cloud-user-data-file
or --cloud-network-config-file
have been
specified.
It works like --disk
without the size part. --cloud-seed-disk
specifies
which disk preset to use when creating the
NoCloud
seed disk.
The naming pattern for the seed disk is <VM-NAME>-seed
.
Example: --cloud-seed-disk local,bus=scsi
.
Developing
See DEVELOPING.md
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